Use raw_input in Python 2 to get a string, input in Python 2 is equivalent to eval(raw_input)
.
>>> type(raw_input())
23
<type 'str'>
>>> type(input())
12
<type 'int'>
So, When you enter something like n
in input
it thinks that you're looking for a variable named n
:
>>> input()
n
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<ipython-input-30-5c7a218085ef>", line 1, in <module>
type(input())
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
NameError: name 'n' is not defined
raw_input
works fine:
>>> raw_input()
n
'n'
help on raw_input
:
>>> print raw_input.__doc__
raw_input([prompt]) -> string
Read a string from standard input. The trailing newline is stripped.
If the user hits EOF (Unix: Ctl-D, Windows: Ctl-Z+Return), raise EOFError.
On Unix, GNU readline is used if enabled. The prompt string, if given,
is printed without a trailing newline before reading.
help on input
:
>>> print input.__doc__
input([prompt]) -> value
Equivalent to eval(raw_input(prompt)).